4.8 Article

A decade of sea level rise slowed by climate-driven hydrology

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 351, Issue 6274, Pages 699-703

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aad8386

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Funding

  1. NASA
  2. NASA GRACE Science Team
  3. University of California Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives
  4. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Taiwan [MOST 103-2111-M-002-006]

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Climate-driven changes in land water storage and their contributions to sea level rise have been absent from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sea level budgets owing to observational challenges. Recent advances in satellite measurement of time-variable gravity combined with reconciled global glacier loss estimates enable a disaggregation of continental land mass changes and a quantification of this term. We found that between 2002 and 2014, climate variability resulted in an additional 3200 +/- 900 gigatons of water being stored on land. This gain partially offset water losses from ice sheets, glaciers, and groundwater pumping, slowing the rate of sea level rise by 0.71 +/- 0.20 millimeters per year. These findings highlight the importance of climate-driven changes in hydrology when assigning attribution to decadal changes in sea level.

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